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Give Me Hope

Page 5

by Zoey Derrick


  “She wasn’t raped.” I fall into the nearest chair. “Judging by the severe bruising on her ankles and wrists, and by those around her neck, I imagine that was the intention, but we’ve checked her for any internal damage and there are no recent signs.”

  My head falls into my hands. “Jesus Christ, what has she been through?”

  “As a medical professional, I can’t tell you that. The only reason I’m telling you this much is because I know that her next of kin is her mother, who isn’t of sound mind, and...” She pauses. I look at her to continue. “When she was here last time, when you brought her in.” I nod. “She listed you as her emergency contact on the paperwork I left for her. Amanda, my nurse, found it in her room after she was discharged.”

  My heart skips a few beats, and I know I stop breathing. I have no clue why something as inconsequential as leaving my name as a point of contact has such a profound effect on me. Hell, I don’t know much of anything anymore.

  “She’s broken, Mikah, and as much as I know you want to fix her, you need to talk to her first. Get to know her. Her physical history is telling. I have no doubt that if approached in the right fashion, she will open up and start talking to you. But don’t push her,” she says with a glare. I nod my understanding. “She’s upstairs, top floor.”

  Immediately I stand and hold out my hand. She takes it. “Thank you,” I say sincerely as I fight back the tears that threaten to spill over.

  “My pleasure. Go. See her, be with her. I warn you though – she has a tube in her mouth, a machine is breathing for her, and she is very badly bruised up. And that is only what is starting to show now. So be ginger with her.”

  I nod solemnly and head for the door and the elevator to my right. As I push the up button, I sense Red approaching.

  “Go home, cara. No need for you to be here,” I say at the same time that he pushes the down button.

  “I know.”

  “Thank you. I really appreciate you being here.”

  “I know. I’ll be back around six with food. Here, take this.” He hands me the duffle bag with my stuff in it. I take it from him. “Your chargers are in there, plus your laptop. Need anything else from home?”

  I hear the ding of the elevator to my right and head toward it. “Right now, no. I will call if I think of something.”

  He nods as the doors slide open and I step in.

  “Oh, call Detective Stevens for me. Tell him what Dr. Alston said and that if he needs me, he knows where to find me.”

  “Got it,” he says as the doors close.

  Eighteen

  As I come around the corner from the elevator, I see two cops standing outside of a room. Neither is talking to the other, which I find strangely comforting. At least I know they’re paying attention. The one closest to me turns in my direction as I approach.

  “How can we help you?” he says.

  “I’m Mikah Blake. I’m here to see Vivienne Callahan.”

  He nods in recognition of my name but turns to face me, feet apart, at the ready.

  “I need to see some identification, please.”

  I’m not sure whether to be irritated or impressed by his question. I reach for my wallet, but it’s not there. Damn it.

  “It’s in my bag,” I say, letting him know that I need to reach into someplace he can’t see.

  “Mind if I check?” he asks.

  I hold out the bag to him.

  “Set it down, please, and take three steps back.”

  I seriously want to roll my eyes. I’m the last person they need to worry about. But I take a comfort in knowing that if I have to go through this much trouble, so will everyone else.

  I take the three steps back plus one for good measure, trying not to seem as impatient as I feel. “It should be right on top,” I say. “If it’s not there, then it’s in the long side pocket.”

  He begins opening up the zipper on the top. I can see when he opens it that my wallet is not there. My heart skips a beat. Crap, I could have sworn I put it in the main compartment.

  He doesn’t hesitate but goes straight into the side pocket. I can’t see what he’s seeing, but he puts his hand in and moves a few things around. “Is this it?” He looks up at me as he pulls out my black leather wallet.

  “Yes, sir.”

  He stands back up, looking inside the wallet, glancing from me to the driver’s license. “I need to search your bag, Mr. Blake.”

  “Whatever you need.”

  He bends back down and starts glancing through my bag. Nothing but a few articles of clothing and my shaving kit are inside. Laptop and cell phone chargers are also in there, but he seems satisfied at a cursory glance.

  “Can you put your hands on the wall next to you?”

  Oh for crying out loud. I turn toward the wall, put my hands up and spread my legs slightly. He comes up behind me and quickly pats down my under my arms and hips and runs his hands down the outside of my legs to my ankles and stands.

  “Here’s your wallet. As long as were here, we won’t bother you again. Our shift changes at midnight. After that, make sure you have at least your wallet when you leave the room,” he states matter-of-factly.

  “How long will officers be posted here?” I ask.

  “Until she is discharged or the suspect is caught, whichever comes first.”

  “Detective Stevens?”

  He nods curtly. “He’s pretty adamant about keeping her well-protected. From what I understand of the situation, I don’t blame him for that.”

  I nod at him. “May I go in now?”

  “Absolutely.” He steps aside, and the other officer moves away from the door to allow me to pass.

  I can’t help but feel slightly grateful for their presence here. “Thank you, gentlemen,” I say.

  After all my eagerness to see her, I suddenly feel anxious.

  As if in slow motion, I watch my hand reach for the door handle. Turn it. I hear and feel the click as it unlatches. I push, moving forward with the door. It feels like minutes before I clear the jamb and step into the room.

  A curtain separates me from the rest of the room. I shut the door behind me. Soft lamp light comes through the curtain.

  It takes a moment before I can make myself step past the curtain; after everything Dr. Alston told me about her condition, I’m afraid of what I’m going to see on the other side. Then the image of her walking toward me in the dream surfaces – Vivienne in a white gown, her vibrant red hair flowing over her shoulders. Beautiful.

  I take a deep breath, reach for the curtain with my free hand and gingerly slide it back. I let out the breath I’ve been holding when I realize that I can’t really see anything yet. There is a small hallway and the room opens up to the left.

  I set my bag down along the wall opposite the bathroom and take a few steps forward. The room is decorated in pale blues with a flower wallpaper boarder at the top of the walls. The only furniture is a cherry wood cabinet, a roll-away bed with blankets and pillows on top, and Vivienne’s bed.

  As I take another step into the room, I hear the faint, rhythmic wheezing of pressurized air being forced through a tube, then sucked out again. In and out.

  Suck it up, buttercup, I tell myself and take that last step to bring me around the corner of the short hallway so I can get a full view of the bed and Vivienne.

  Nineteen

  The bed is laid out flat, but she is turned slightly away from me. It only takes me a moment to realize it’s because there’s a pillow underneath her shoulder and arm, which allows her arm to rest on the pillow rather than being held by a sling.

  Her gorgeous red hair is splayed out across the top of the bed, and I can see the tube going into her mouth. Her eyes are closed. Her face looks peaceful, relaxed.

  She actually looks quite comfortable.

  On closer inspection, I see the bruising around her neck that Dr. Alston was talking about, and my heart stutters. I see where they put the IV into her left arm, and further down, the
deep purple bruising around her wrist. I just want to cry, an urge further aggravated by the constant pushing and pulling of air through the machine.

  A small movement next to the bed catches my eye. Coming from a machine, below a monitor, is a long, narrow strip of paper that has piled up and curled around on itself. It looks like calculator tape. My eyes pop up to the machine it’s coming from. A heart monitor line bounces quickly across the screen with the number one hundred fifty above it. To the right of the one hundred fifty is the name Baby Callahan.

  The baby’s heart rate is so fast. Is that normal? I have no idea. I remember it was fast before, but I didn’t realize it would be that fast.

  My eyes follow four thick black wires that disappear under the covers. On the other side of the bed from the fetal monitor are the IV machine, monitors for Vivienne, and a brown leather chair.

  I walk around the bed and sit down. It’s only about four thirty, but I’m exhausted. All the adrenaline of the day is more than my body can handle. Looking at Vivienne makes me ashamed of my own tiredness; she’s been through far more today than I have.

  God she looks so pale, fragile. She always looked fragile, but right now she looks so vulnerable to everything. But she has survived all this; I can never think of her as weak and vulnerable ever again. She is strong, and this woman has an amazing determination to survive. Compared to all I imagine she’s been through, living through the deaths of my family members is nothing.

  I lean forward and place my forehead on the bed railing. “Vivienne, I’m so sorry,” I say. “I wish I’d gotten there faster. Or that I’d never let you go back to that apartment in the first place.”

  Beep, beep, beep.

  The sound is coming from my right. I look up at the heart monitor, which shows a flat line sliding to the left of the screen followed by the up and downs of her heartbeat. Above the normal monitor line is an image. It is the same as what is scrolling along the bottom, except in the place of where there should have been two of her regular heartbeats, there is nothing but a flat line.

  “Vivienne?”

  A slow beat, then silence.

  “Vivienne, can you hear me?”

  Another slow beat.

  “Vivienne, I’m here. I’m so, so sorry.”

  Silence.

  My heart races, then the machine blips again and the heartbeat comes back strong. I can’t help but smile. She knows I’m here. Whether it is a conscious thought or not, she knows.

  I blink back the tears. I want to touch her, but I’m afraid to. It looks like everywhere hurts. I decide against it for now. But I do lower the bed rail so that it’s not separating us, pull the chair closer to the bed, and put my head gently on the mattress near her shoulder. “I’m here, I won’t leave.” And I let my eyes slowly close.

  Twenty

  It doesn’t take but a moment for the vision to return. A different white room this time; this one has two windows. But the scenery beyond them is little more than a white blur. Taking a moment to look around, I see that some other things have changed. There is a white vase on the white coffee table, filled with white flowers.

  The only color is Vivienne’s red, flowing hair as she continues to walk toward me. This time she is moving faster, but she’s still so far away. I try once again to walk toward her but I can’t; I’m rooted to the floor by some invisible force.

  I watch as she comes closer and becomes clearer, more defined. I can make out some of the silver accents on her dress. Intricate designs on the white material. The dress is a plunging v-neck with a silver belt below her breasts. It flows out behind her as she walks. She looks beautiful with a white flower over her left ear. She smiles at me and my heart melts. I want to hold her so bad.

  I put out my arms and notice that they are bare and more muscular than in real life. And there’s an intricate tribal tattoo running along my right arm. Where the hell did that come from? I look down at my body and see first that I’m shirtless and then that the tattoo continues onto my chest. I am wearing pants, thank God. White ones that almost look like pajamas.

  I look back up at Vivienne. She’s gotten a lot closer, but she is still a ways off. I flex my shoulders in impatience, and that’s when I hear and feel it at the same time: a shifting on my back. I flex again, and Vivienne giggles.

  My heads snaps up in her direction. She is covering her mouth with her hand in an attempt to stifle her laugh. I want to ask her what she is laughing at when I feel the movement again.

  My stomach sinks. I’m not sure I’m ready for this, but I turn my head slowly to the right. I’m met with a wall of white feathers.

  Instinctively I turn to better see it, but as I move, so does the wall of feathers. Damn it.

  She laughs again.

  “This is not funny,” I say out loud.

  She laughs again anyway.

  I turn again, and still it moves with me. With my left hand I reach out, trying to grab it, to touch it. The moment my hand makes contact with the feathers, pure, undiluted pleasure courses through my body and I feel my knees buckle. I quickly pull my hand away and look back toward Vivienne.

  She is pointing to my left so I turn in that direction. A mirror. How did I miss this before?

  I look back at Vivienne. She points again, with more urgency, so I take a step toward the mirror. And another.

  Shapes and colors begin to coalesce in the mirror with each passing step. I close my eyes, afraid of what I might see, and take three more steps.

  “Mr. Blake.”

  I can’t open my eyes.

  “Mr. Blake.” The voice comes again. Damn it, no.

  Twenty-One

  “Mikah.” Again the voice comes. I slowly open my eyes. I’m back in the hospital room and a nurse wearing pale pink scrubs is standing over me.

  “Huh?” I ask.

  “Hi, Mr. Blake. Remember me?”

  I look up into the soft round face of Vivienne’s nurse from before. “Hi, Amanda.”

  “Hi there. I’m sorry to wake you, but we need to run some tests on Vivienne and shift her a little bit.”

  “Uh, sure.” I stand up and push the chair back. “Can I stay?”

  “Of course. Just step back, okay?”

  I nod and step toward the foot of the bed. I notice that there is another nurse in the room with us. I rub my eyes to dispel the fog of sleep.

  The moment I close my eyes, the dreaming sensation returns. I open them quickly, not wanting to slip back into that dream. Not just yet. I look at my right arm for the tattoo from the dream, but there is nothing there. I let out a long exhale.

  Amanda and the other nurse go about their business. I watch as they check a couple of things on the monitors, but when they turn her onto her left side, my heart starts to race. Amanda holds her while the other nurse puts the stethoscope to Vivienne’s back. She moves it around a couple of times and nods to Amanda, and they lay her back down.

  The other nurse, whose name I can’t see, continues to go about checking things as Amanda comes over to me.

  “She’s doing alright. Her vitals look good. You seem to have a profound effect on her heart when you’re around.” She smiles at me and I return a quizzical look. “Dr. Alston told me, and I can see the snap shot on the monitor.” She smiles again. “Her lungs are clearing up, which is a good thing, and she doesn’t seem to be in any pain right now.” I nod. “Have you had dinner?”

  I look at my watch. It’s nearly six. “No, but Red should be bringing some food shortly. Thank you.”

  “Of course.”

  She turns to go back to the bed to finish up.

  “Oh, I almost forgot,” I say. “The number over on that monitor. Is that the baby’s heart rate?”

  She looks over to the monitor and back at me. “It sure is.”

  “Is that...normal?”

  She smiles. “That is a great number to have up there. Babies’ hearts beat far faster than ours do. The monitor will go off here and at the nurse’s station if the rate d
rops below one thirty five. Which is still in the normal range, but we want to keep a very close eye on it.”

  I nod. I’m not normally this speechless when it comes to things, but all this medical stuff is so foreign to me.

  “If the heart rate drops, it may also be a sign that Vivienne is in distress.”

  “Okay. This is all so out of my area of expertise.” I feel helpless right now, and asking these questions is the only thing I can think of that might help me feel more in control of a situation I clearly have no control over.

  “That’s why we’re here, Mr. Blake,” the nurse behind Amanda says.

  “Thank you,” I say. They both gather up their equipment and head for the door.

  “Do you need anything, Mr. Blake?”

  “Mikah. And no, I’m fine. Thank you.”

  “Of course, Mikah. If that changes, go ahead and press the button on the remote on the bed and we’ll do what we can.”

  “Thanks again.”

  She nods and ducks out the door.

  I look back at Vivienne. This is going to be a very long road, and I am not a very patient person. It nearly killed me to give Vivienne the space she wanted after the last time we were here, and the only reason I did it was because I knew that I’d pushed her beyond her limits. After leaving her room that day, I researched post-traumatic stress disorder and, while I’m no expert, I see now what I did wrong. Given the chance again, I won’t make the same mistake twice.

  Although I’m still tired, and on top of that have a burning need to see what will happen next in the vision, I decide that it’s best not to shut my eyes yet. I’m pretty sure Red will be here before long, and I’d much rather have some uninterrupted time to see where this is going.

  I make a quick trip to the bathroom and then grab my laptop and head back to the chair, placing my computer between me and the armrest, facing Vivienne. She looks the same: peaceful.

  When I gently touch the back of her hand, I’m momentarily taken aback by how warm her skin feels, but that is more than likely a good thing. Once the shock wears off, I notice that there is an unfamiliar pulse that runs through my body. But this time it’s not from my back; it’s from my heart.

 

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